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Culicoides Midge Bites Modulate the Host Response and Impact on Bluetongue Virus Infection in Sheep

Many haematophagous insects produce factors that help their blood meal and coincidently favor pathogen transmission. However nothing is known about the ability of Culicoides midges to interfere with the infectivity of the viruses they transmit. Among these, Bluetongue Virus (BTV) induces a hemorrhag...

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Autores principales: Pages, Nonito, Bréard, Emmanuel, Urien, Céline, Talavera, Sandra, Viarouge, Cyril, Lorca-Oro, Cristina, Jouneau, Luc, Charley, Bernard, Zientara, Stéphan, Bensaid, Albert, Solanes, David, Pujols, Joan, Schwartz-Cornil, Isabelle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3885445/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24421899
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083683
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author Pages, Nonito
Bréard, Emmanuel
Urien, Céline
Talavera, Sandra
Viarouge, Cyril
Lorca-Oro, Cristina
Jouneau, Luc
Charley, Bernard
Zientara, Stéphan
Bensaid, Albert
Solanes, David
Pujols, Joan
Schwartz-Cornil, Isabelle
author_facet Pages, Nonito
Bréard, Emmanuel
Urien, Céline
Talavera, Sandra
Viarouge, Cyril
Lorca-Oro, Cristina
Jouneau, Luc
Charley, Bernard
Zientara, Stéphan
Bensaid, Albert
Solanes, David
Pujols, Joan
Schwartz-Cornil, Isabelle
author_sort Pages, Nonito
collection PubMed
description Many haematophagous insects produce factors that help their blood meal and coincidently favor pathogen transmission. However nothing is known about the ability of Culicoides midges to interfere with the infectivity of the viruses they transmit. Among these, Bluetongue Virus (BTV) induces a hemorrhagic fever- type disease and its recent emergence in Europe had a major economical impact. We observed that needle inoculation of BTV8 in the site of uninfected C. nubeculosus feeding reduced viraemia and clinical disease intensity compared to plain needle inoculation. The sheep that developed the highest local inflammatory reaction had the lowest viral load, suggesting that the inflammatory response to midge bites may participate in the individual sensitivity to BTV viraemia development. Conversely compared to needle inoculation, inoculation of BTV8 by infected C. nubeculosus bites promoted viraemia and clinical symptom expression, in association with delayed IFN- induced gene expression and retarded neutralizing antibody responses. The effects of uninfected and infected midge bites on BTV viraemia and on the host response indicate that BTV transmission by infected midges is the most reliable experimental method to study the physio-pathological events relevant to a natural infection and to pertinent vaccine evaluation in the target species. It also leads the way to identify the promoting viral infectivity factors of infected Culicoides in order to possibly develop new control strategies against BTV and other Culicoides transmitted viruses.
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spelling pubmed-38854452014-01-13 Culicoides Midge Bites Modulate the Host Response and Impact on Bluetongue Virus Infection in Sheep Pages, Nonito Bréard, Emmanuel Urien, Céline Talavera, Sandra Viarouge, Cyril Lorca-Oro, Cristina Jouneau, Luc Charley, Bernard Zientara, Stéphan Bensaid, Albert Solanes, David Pujols, Joan Schwartz-Cornil, Isabelle PLoS One Research Article Many haematophagous insects produce factors that help their blood meal and coincidently favor pathogen transmission. However nothing is known about the ability of Culicoides midges to interfere with the infectivity of the viruses they transmit. Among these, Bluetongue Virus (BTV) induces a hemorrhagic fever- type disease and its recent emergence in Europe had a major economical impact. We observed that needle inoculation of BTV8 in the site of uninfected C. nubeculosus feeding reduced viraemia and clinical disease intensity compared to plain needle inoculation. The sheep that developed the highest local inflammatory reaction had the lowest viral load, suggesting that the inflammatory response to midge bites may participate in the individual sensitivity to BTV viraemia development. Conversely compared to needle inoculation, inoculation of BTV8 by infected C. nubeculosus bites promoted viraemia and clinical symptom expression, in association with delayed IFN- induced gene expression and retarded neutralizing antibody responses. The effects of uninfected and infected midge bites on BTV viraemia and on the host response indicate that BTV transmission by infected midges is the most reliable experimental method to study the physio-pathological events relevant to a natural infection and to pertinent vaccine evaluation in the target species. It also leads the way to identify the promoting viral infectivity factors of infected Culicoides in order to possibly develop new control strategies against BTV and other Culicoides transmitted viruses. Public Library of Science 2014-01-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3885445/ /pubmed/24421899 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083683 Text en © 2014 Pages et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pages, Nonito
Bréard, Emmanuel
Urien, Céline
Talavera, Sandra
Viarouge, Cyril
Lorca-Oro, Cristina
Jouneau, Luc
Charley, Bernard
Zientara, Stéphan
Bensaid, Albert
Solanes, David
Pujols, Joan
Schwartz-Cornil, Isabelle
Culicoides Midge Bites Modulate the Host Response and Impact on Bluetongue Virus Infection in Sheep
title Culicoides Midge Bites Modulate the Host Response and Impact on Bluetongue Virus Infection in Sheep
title_full Culicoides Midge Bites Modulate the Host Response and Impact on Bluetongue Virus Infection in Sheep
title_fullStr Culicoides Midge Bites Modulate the Host Response and Impact on Bluetongue Virus Infection in Sheep
title_full_unstemmed Culicoides Midge Bites Modulate the Host Response and Impact on Bluetongue Virus Infection in Sheep
title_short Culicoides Midge Bites Modulate the Host Response and Impact on Bluetongue Virus Infection in Sheep
title_sort culicoides midge bites modulate the host response and impact on bluetongue virus infection in sheep
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3885445/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24421899
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083683
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